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Taiwan 'can be the bridge' between Vatican and Beijing

Taiwan church can also serve as a link between underground and patriotic churches in China, says Father Jeroom Heyndrickx
Taiwan 'can be the bridge' between Vatican and Beijing

Wang Yu-yuan (left), former Taiwan ambassador to the Holy See. Seated are Father Heyndrickx, the founding director of the Ferdinand Verbiest Foundation at Leuven Catholic University in Belgium, and Gu Weiying, a retired professor on Catholic history. (ucanews.com photo)

Published: December 12, 2016 06:35 AM GMT
Updated: December 12, 2016 09:11 AM GMT

The Catholic Church in Taiwan can play a bridging role between the Vatican and Beijing as well as between the government-sanctioned and the underground church communities in China, agreed speakers at a seminar.

Belgian Father Jeroom Heyndrickx, a sinologist who makes frequent visits to China and Taiwan was one of three speakers at the Taipei seminar hosted by the Chinese Christian Spirit Community on Dec. 2, said he is optimistic on China-Vatican relations .

Father Heyndrickx said he saw that mainland China has become a "person of dialogue" since the government’s reform and opening policy in late 1970s while the Vatican is a "church of dialogue."

"The Taiwan church should serve as a bridge between the underground church and the patriotic church," said Father Heyndrickx who is the founding director of the Ferdinand Verbiest Foundation at Leuven Catholic University in Belgium.

"With Fu Jen Catholic University, including the theology school, accepting students from mainland China, it is the greatest gift that the church in Taiwan gives to the church in China," he said.

The idea of a "bridge church" was proposed by the late Cardinal Paul Shan Kuo-hsi to persuade the Vatican not to give up on Taiwan when diplomatic relations between the two parties faced crisis in 1999, said another speaker Ku Wei-ying, a retired professor on Catholic history.

"The former Vatican's Secretary of State, Cardinal Angelo Sodano, said in 1999 that the Vatican was not severing ties with Taiwan," said Gu. "It was just moving the doorplate of the ‘Nunciature of China' to where it was originally from," he said.

Ku implied the doorplate has no indication it refers to People's Republic of China or Republic of China, often known as Taiwan.

Ku anticipated that China and the Vatican might take a "gradual approach by first setting up a liaison office."

The third speaker at the seminar, Wang Yu-yuan, a former Taiwan ambassador to the Holy See, said that Taiwanese should be paying attention to the Vatican's efforts to broker a deal with Beijing over bishop appointments in mainland China.

"Pope Francis has repeatedly expressed goodwill to the Beijing authorities and his wish is to establish normalized relations," said Wang.

"It shows relations between the two parties have never been better as now," he said.

Media attention in Taiwan over the issue is currently tempered with anxiety given that the Vatican is the only European state that Taiwan maintains diplomatic relationships with.

While negotiations are said to be about bishop appointments, there are concerns in Taiwan that this might ultimately lead to changes in Taiwan-Vatican diplomatic relations.

Wang thinks that since the China-Vatican working group was formed only this year, negotiations will still take some time.

Giving a comparison, Wang said the Holy See has conducted nearly 10 years of progress with Vietnam's communist regime since initial contact began in 2007.

There are an estimated 300,000 Catholics among Taiwan's 23 million people.

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